5. Walking Corpse Syndrome
This rare mental illness causes people to believe that they are dead, have lost body parts, or simply don’t exist. Living as a real life zombie has its highs and lows. While at first it comes with a cathartic feeling of freedom from the trivial matters we living deal with on the day to day, but it is quickly followed up with an overwhelming depression and nihilistic outlook. They feel completely detached from the rest of the world, alone in their afterlife.
Since Cotard’s Syndrome deludes it’s victims into thinking they are already dead or don’t exist, they are also convinced that they do not need to eat or bathe, turning them into the skeletal, rotten smelling image that comes to mind when we think “zombie.” While denial of self-existence is most common with Cotard’s Syndrome, it is nearly just as likely for them to believe they have become immortal.
In 1880, neurologist Jules Cotard studied one patient titled “Mademoiselle X” who was convinced that because she had no brain, nerves, chest, stomach, or intestines she had no need to eat. Mademoiselle X later died of starvation.
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